IS INDIA UNDERESTIMATING THE COST OF DEALING WITH INVASIVE SPECIES?
IS INDIA UNDERESTIMATING THE COST OF DEALING WITH INVASIVE SPECIES?
Introduction
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Invasive Alien Species (IAS) are non-native plants, animals, or microorganisms that spread rapidly in new ecosystems, threatening biodiversity, livelihoods, and economies.
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A recent study in Nature Ecology & Evolution estimates that global damages from invasive species cost society $2.2 trillion (1960–2022), with plants alone accounting for $926 billion.
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For India, the study highlights a staggering 1.16 billion percent discrepancy between reported and actual management costs, indicating massive underestimation and poor documentation.
The Global Picture of Invasive Species
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Regional Impacts:
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Europe: $1.5 trillion (71% of global cost).
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North America: $226 billion.
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Asia: $182 billion.
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Key Drivers:
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Trade and travel under globalisation.
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Bilateral deals introducing alien flora and fauna.
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Major Invaders Worldwide: Japanese knotweed, common lantana, invasive arthropods, and mammals.
India’s Context
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Lantana in Bandipur National Park:
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Dominates forest floor, highly combustible when dry, raising forest fire risks.
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Data Gaps:
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India records the highest underreporting in management expenditure.
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Lack of centralised monitoring, inter-agency coordination, and language barriers in data reporting.
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Sectors Affected:
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Agriculture – crop losses, pest invasions.
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Forestry – biodiversity degradation, fuel for wildfires.
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Health – vectors for zoonotic diseases.
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Economy – reduced productivity and rising management costs.
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Why Costs are Underestimated in India
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Inadequate Documentation – fragmented, regionalised reporting with little central oversight.
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Resource Constraints – limited budget allocations for IAS management compared to competing developmental priorities.
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Awareness Gap – policymakers and public perceive IAS as ecological, not economic, problems.
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Invisible Costs – damage to ecosystem services (pollination, soil fertility, water regulation) often unquantified.
Ecological and Strategic Implications
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Threat to Biodiversity: IAS outcompete native species, leading to local extinctions.
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Climate Risks: Flammable weeds like lantana intensify fire frequency and carbon emissions.
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Food Security Risks: Pests and invasive plants reduce crop yields.
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Strategic Challenge: India’s position as a megadiverse country makes biological invasion a national security issue for ecology and economy.
Policy and Global Frameworks
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International Instruments:
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Ballast Water Management Convention – regulates shipping practices to prevent aquatic invasions.
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Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) – obliges nations to prevent, control, or eradicate alien species.
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India’s Gaps:
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Weak integration of IAS in national biodiversity strategies.
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Scattered efforts by state forest departments, agricultural universities, and research institutes.
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Way Forward
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Centralised Database & Monitoring: Strengthen documentation of IAS costs and management outcomes.
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Integrated Policy Framework: Align biodiversity conservation, agriculture, trade, and forest policies.
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Early Detection & Rapid Response (EDRR): Prevent introduction and spread rather than relying on costly eradication.
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Community Engagement: Local communities as first responders in detecting and managing IAS.
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Increased Investment: Dedicated funding for research, eradication, and ecological restoration.
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Global Cooperation: Collaborate with international frameworks for knowledge sharing and joint action.
Conclusion
India is underestimating both the ecological and economic costs of invasive species. The massive discrepancy in reported costs reflects systemic neglect in data collection and strategic response. With biodiversity loss accelerating and economic costs mounting, invasive species management must move from the periphery to the mainstream of environmental and developmental policy. Recognising IAS as a silent but massive economic liability is crucial for safeguarding India’s ecosystems, food security, and economy.
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